MU scientists created one of the first 3D models showing how ligaments and joints in the skull of a Tyrannosaurus rex work.
Sept. 25, 2019
A Tyrannosaurus rex could bite hard enough to shatter the bones of its prey. But how it accomplished this feat without breaking its own skull bones has baffled paleontologists. That’s why scientists at the University of Missouri are arguing that the T. rex’s skull was stiff much like the skulls of hyenas and crocodiles, and not flexible like snakes and birds as paleontologists previously thought. Full Story
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